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I just noticed a correlation to your use of WTF and test block...interesting.
I would say my tolerance for any annoyance has a strong inverse relationship with proximity to test block.
I just noticed a correlation to your use of WTF and test block...interesting.
The people in my mod learned to cut me a wide swath the week before test block... and not to even try to talk to me during test block. I would begin talking again at the post-block luncheon we always had... and I always started with the same thing, "I do not want to hear one f**king word about specific test questions."I would say my tolerance for any annoyance has a strong inverse relationship with proximity to test block.
The people in my mod learned to cut me a wide swath the week before test block... and not to even try to talk to me during test block. I would begin talking again at the post-block luncheon we always had... and I always started with the same thing, "I do not want to hear one f**king word about specific test questions."
God, I'm so lucky that they put up with me. I didn't deserve it.
I would say my tolerance for any annoyance has a strong inverse relationship with proximity to test block.
Just wanted to throw out some props to the red raiders this week.
It's based roughly on clock hours of lecture time - at least, that's the way Leon did it - and I assume Bidi is doing the same thing. Suffering over the syllabus is something you do in private.Does anyone know if the number of questions/professor's section is based on syllabus length or number or lectures for biochem?
I got another couple of "catches" last night. Woo-hoo! I'm finally at the point where I don't feel so frightened anymore. Ever notice how much you contract your own stomach muscles while the mother is pushing?
God, that is awful. Holding the baby is absolutely by far the worst part of a delivery. You grab the head properly, get the superior shoulder under the pubic symphysis - then pull up to deliver the other shoulder. After that, honestly (and I was thinking about this last night) - I couldn't tell you how I do it. I know what I was taught, but I'm not sure that's what happens. I just know that somehow I end up with the kid cradled in one arm with my hand supporting the head and neck. For some reason I just have no memory of how I do it - too much trauma for a memory trace, I guess.Do you have any idea how scary it is to hold a baby up for mommy to see when one of your hands is being guided almost entirely by sight?
It's a very sickening feeling when you've realized that you have underestimated the time it takes to learn something (ahem-biochem) and you have grossly misbudgeted your time for it. It's like watching a traing wreck unfold in slow motion before your very eyes.
I'll be pulling a true all-nighter tonight, and I probably still won't get through half the information.
I'll be pulling a true all-nighter tonight, and I probably still won't get through half the information.
PMM - I'm working all night, too, so you've got company (at least in spirit).
Not to be too much of a downer, but the one time I pulled an all-nighter last year was my worst exam performance of the entire year. Try to get at least a couple hours of sleep. It will help.
My 2 cents.
Good luck, guys. First years - keep an eye on Dr. Weigel. He's a great teacher and his material seems very understandable and straight-forward - but then his exam questions absolutely blow. On block II, I did worse on his section than anybody else's but I understood his stuff the best - I just wasn't ready for the level of detail he wanted. We had heard that Weigel was tough, then he gave a review session that was very reassuring. I still got my butt kicked, 'cause his review session about the level of detail he expected was pure B.S.
We learned about diabetes in biochem? 😕 😳And if you've got no clue about diabetes after the presentation in biochem, don't worry because it'll come later.
This could be more related to whatever made you feel you needed to stay up all night to study, i.e. you probably felt less prepared (and you probably were if you felt you needed the all-nighter), which may have been the source of the lower grade. The only exam I unintentionally got no sleep (not even an hour) for was our last neuro test last year... I couldn't even make sense of the questions. I felt like I was staring at Japanese. So sleep-deprivation certainly plays a part.Not to be too much of a downer, but the one time I pulled an all-nighter last year was my worst exam performance of the entire year.
I don't know about not doing an all-nighter. For my part, if I don't feel prepared for an exam, I can't sleep because I keep wondering about little factoids that I should look up. Also, I am straight-up terrified of accidentally oversleeping. It is incredibly punishing to miss a single exam in medical school. You are close to gauranteed to fail if you do. I did the math, and I figure it is actually cheaper to intentionally wreck my car than retake a second year of medical school. Granted, the ethics of doing that are ... questionable?... but, these are the paranoid thoughts that keep me from getting any decent sleep.
I don't know about not doing an all-nighter. For my part, if I don't feel prepared for an exam, I can't sleep because I keep wondering about little factoids that I should look up. Also, I am straight-up terrified of accidentally oversleeping. It is incredibly punishing to miss a single exam in medical school. You are close to gauranteed to fail if you do. I did the math, and I figure it is actually cheaper to intentionally wreck my car than retake a second year of medical school. Granted, the ethics of doing that are ... questionable?... but, these are the paranoid thoughts that keep me from getting any decent sleep.
Bravo, you probably ought to consider trying it out. The ability to sleep immediately after an exam >> before.
I don't know about not doing an all-nighter. For my part, if I don't feel prepared for an exam, I can't sleep because I keep wondering about little factoids that I should look up. Also, I am straight-up terrified of accidentally oversleeping. It is incredibly punishing to miss a single exam in medical school. You are close to gauranteed to fail if you do. I did the math, and I figure it is actually cheaper to intentionally wreck my car than retake a second year of medical school. Granted, the ethics of doing that are ... questionable?... but, these are the paranoid thoughts that keep me from getting any decent sleep.
Thats why I usually stick the JWAX/Freeze (?) study schedule. All night before the test, crash for a few hours after, and study the next night through. It has worked for me so far.
What you need to know for DeAngelis is pretty intuitive. Know the clotting cascade and all the different little clotting tests. If its any consolation, next test block is both easier and more interesting... plus, professors are entertaining... cept Hanas.
Yeah. I'm going to quit whining about sleep now. I know you guys have a more painful week than I can yet imagine.![]()
Not at all. I actually feel you guys are worse off than us. You've got H/N anatomy and the worst block of biochem. So you guys are the ones that need the. I'm glad that the sleeping post-tests works for you as well, although I can't imagine not being able to sleep after TB is over. I also don't remotely support intentionally sleeping only 3-4 hours in the weeks approaching TB. I get the impression that it was unintentional for you, but I certainly knew people last year who were sleeping like that on purpose 2 weeks before exams. 😱 There is no way on earth that can be useful. Or necessary, for that matter. If you (the general you, not Bravo you) aren't getting it done on a normal sleep schedule that far back from exams, you are doing something wrong IMO. Something like what I am doing right now, where I have been "studying" for the last 5 hours... but I have only read 10 pages of bacteriology flashcards. 🙄 Tomorrow (well, tonight for me) is going to be fuuuun.
I definitely don't do that. I get as much sleep as I can. I would during TB, too, but I tend to not study as much as I should during down time. I was never an all-nighter kind of girl, but I am now. I actually did pretty well last TB with the 3-4 hour nights. I said this last time and I'll say it again, next TB, I'm going to try to stay on top of things better so that I'm not doing this to myself. (Yeah, like that'll happen. I'm too much of a slacker/procrastinater for med school.)
The problem is that it is a perpetual cycle that sets you up for failure. The beginning of the year, you're all like "La la la... I'm in med school. The year's just beginning so I can take it slow." Then a few weeks before the first block you say "Oh s*it!! Test block is in 2 weeks and I DON'T KNOW ANY OF THIS CRAP!!!". So you spend the next 2 weeks before and week of test block studying you a' off. Once it is over, you are so burned out from that first marathon that you can't bring yourself to study for at least a week, if not two... by then the next block is already only 2 or 3 weeks away. Repeat cycle until dead or you're an attending, whichever happens first.
It is amazing the things I am coming up with to avoid studying. This is terrible. I think I need a slap in the face.
OK - so instead of that Med Student Juice (can't remember exact name) that you MS-2s made a video of for our pre-orientation - we should do something with this needing to be slapped business...
Prepackaged Slaps, marketed as "Guaranteed to Slap the Sense into You -
Before Test Block Hands Your A-s to You!"
I guess I might need a little tough love myself at the moment, Jwax 🙄
PMM - the Swezda stuff is cake - you might want to grab the NG review word files and give 'em a quick read. It ends up being an easy 1.5 pages and he's got 10 Qs so it should be high yield reading.
PMM - check you PM inbox. It's worth your time. I promise.
Bravo, I luuuuuv you.
All I remember is silver nitrate, but I remember being confused by that b/c I thought that silver nitrate was the match-stick looking thing that kind of burns the flesh on people with open wounds. Not something I imagine I would stick in every newborn's eyes... hmm here's what I found:Is it silver nitrate (syllabus), tetracycline (lecture), erythromycin (first aid)? I imagine if you put all 3, that kid would be conjunctivitis proof.
Prepackaged Slaps, marketed as "Guaranteed to Slap the Sense into You -
Before Test Block Hands Your A-s to You!"
I think I'm going to have to make a run to the grocery store tomorrow (i.e. tonight after mmi) b/c my lunch today consisted of mashed potatoes, creamed corn, and a peanut butter & honey sandwhich on a sesame hamburger bun. That's when I know I'm running low on food...
So, for some reason with it being extremely quiet in the lecture hall during a test, I find that I start hearing music in my head. Sometimes, it is motivational music that I was listening to the night before or random songs.
Now, for some reason, while I am here studying, music sort of goes through my head, and I am finding it distracting. During the test, it is usually calming.
That song "Shake Shake" by Metro Station won't disappear. I have also been digging "Light and Day" by polyphonic spree... makes me feel happy and reminds me of scrubs.
I guess something has to drive out the voices instructing me to kill again...
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All I remember is silver nitrate, but I remember being confused by that b/c I thought that silver nitrate was the match-stick looking thing that kind of burns the flesh on people with open wounds. Not something I imagine I would stick in every newborn's eyes...
Yes and yes. I've always wondered about that myself. If it's strong enough to cauterize the hole left by a punch biopsy is it really a good idea to put in little kiddies' eyes? Maybe WIJG knows the answer - being fresh off the OB-Gyn & peds rotations and having recently had a bambina herself?
PMM - I'm going to head to the school around 6 and study up on 3 of the SU if you want to join me. Comfy couches, peace and quiet, distanced enough from the BSEB to maintain minimal building-associated-anxiety...
Ever seen Eli Stone? Maybe you have an aneurysm 😛.So, for some reason with it being extremely quiet in the lecture hall during a test, I find that I start hearing music in my head. Sometimes, it is motivational music that I was listening to the night before or random songs.
Is Mr. Jwax not around this week to streamline TB?
Oh, and I think you were looking for one of theseearlier
Well that was fun. There is no way that test was harder than the biochem tb2 exam so I guess that's nice.
I walked out feeling like it wasn't as bad as I was expecting but that really isn't a good sign for me judging by past experience.
To grade or not to grade? If I thought I did better than marginal, I definitely would. But if my decent feeling walking out wasn't justified I'd rather not have that negativity as I face the head and neck beast. [shudders]